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Caught Between ISIS and Assad

The Syrian revolution did not start out sectarian. The Syrian war became so.
Illustrations by Molly Crabapple

"ISIS are good fighters, but we fucked them," Yusuf Halap said in fluent English.

Journalist Patrick Hilsman and I were sitting with Yusuf and two other young media activists in the Bab al Salam camp for internally displaced Syrians, a hundred yards south of the Turkish border. Bab al Salam houses 20,000 refugees, mostly women and children. Under dusty tarps, these refugees live in horrid conditions. Barefoot kids play next to rivers of sewage. Preventable diseases flourish. The Turkish government gives out two meals a day, but the United Nations High Council on Refugees does nothing beyond providing some of the tarps. The Assad government has forbidden them from giving aid to opposition areas.

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The Saudis and the government of Qatar are showier, flaunting their generosity with branded tents. "The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia's Gift to Humanity," one read. The Gulf states fund fighters—their charity is marketing.

In this wasteland, young people like Yusuf are trying to cobble together a future. Before the war, Yusuf was a year into an engineering degree. When the revolution hit, his father, a higher-up in the Syrian army, defected. I asked Yusuf why he had joined the revolution. "They were killing women, killing children," he said.

Yusuf works under the banner of the Islamic Front, an alliance of more or less religious fighting groups. The Islamic Front has successfully pushed ISIS out of much of northern Syria, including Azaz, where the Bab al Salam camp is located. However, groups affiliated with the alliance have been implicated in their own war crimes, including murders of POWs and the kidnapping of veteran activist Razan Zeitouna. The commander of accused group Jaish al Islam denies the latter charge.

Yusuf is 24, short and skinny with a skeptical smirk. He first picked up a gun to fight ISIS in Aleppo, where he killed two of their fighters—a Yemeni and a Tunisian, he told me, with a laugh.

When Patrick and I crossed into Syria from Turkey, we saw civilization begin to fray. First, there were the piles of garbage. Then young people missing limbs. Then a line of cars, five days long, of families going into Turkey. Police checked them for car bombs. Some cars sat abandoned in line.

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Trucks, perhaps smuggling weapons, snaked into Syria.

There were green fields on either side of the highway. Their flowers hid land mines. A group of kids, one of them perhaps eight, walked through the minefield. They were trying to sneak back to Syria, without papers, but Turkish soldiers goaded them back toward safety.

Patrick and I crossed into Syria easily. While Turks have so far maintained an open-border policy for Syrians with papers, the same cannot be said for the rest of the world. Our US passports guaranteed freedom of movement. For Syrians, theirs chain them to a quadrangle of four countries, at the whims of politicians who seldom view them as human.

If they don't have papers—or if their papers expire—all the worse. It's not like they can renew them at a regime embassy. A fake Syrian passport goes for $2,000, up from $500 a few years ago. No passport means you're stuck.

In Reyhanli, in Turkey's south, I met a young artist whose family had paid traffickers to smuggle them on a boat to Sweden, the only European country to offer asylum. She was stranded in Gaziantep, another Turkish city close to the Syrian border. Her family was lucky. Traffickers' boats are less than seaworthy. The waters at Lampedusa are rich with Syrian (and Somali, and Palestinian) corpses.

The artist's family had gotten out. Those at Bab al Salam are still inside.

As we walked through the camp, bored kids swarmed us, giving us high fives or making peace signs for Patrick's camera. "They're like flies," Mohammed, a media activist and former English-literature student, joked. He smiled with affection; the children were adorable. But what future will they grow into? One girl, who was 11 but whose growth was stunted by malnutrition, showed me a wart on her hand. "What do you want to be when you grow up?" I asked. "Turkish" she answered.

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Everyone in this camp is Sunni. I asked about the Kurds. "They've gone to their people in the mountains." Alawites? The camp's residents laughed uncomfortably. No. None here. None at all.

The Syrian revolution did not start out sectarian. The Syrian war became so.

The residents of Bab al Salam are caught between Assad, ISIS, and the random violence of the war. Outside the camp, countless deaths are caused by men traumatized from three years of loss, firing surface-to-surface missiles into opposing neighborhoods. Some stranger gets blown up, and the shooter feels like a man. Trauma breeds trauma. Everyone here has seen unimaginable things.

Asma was four years old when she got hit by a barrel bomb. Her face is a mottle of scars. It took eight months after the attack for face to heal enough for her to play. The regime loves to drop barrel bombs on civilian neighborhoods. The bombs are called indiscriminate, though the logic of collective punishment is anything but. Anyone who opposes the regime is a terrorist, Assad says, in an echo of American rhetoric. Those who live among those opposing the regime are also terrorists. It's terrorists all the way down

A middle-aged woman pointed to her arm, where she had been shot by a sniper while running errands. "Who did it?" I asked. "Bashar," she said over and over.

Walid, who said he was 11 but looked seven, had been a keen math student in Homs. He doesn't go to school anymore. His father is dead, blown up by an ISIS car bomb. They've carried out two suicide attacks against the camp. ISIS has been murdering Syrians with impunity for nearly a year, bragging about their war crimes on Twitter. Now they've invaded Mosul in Iraq and the world cares, at least for this week.

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Four years ago these refugees had homes and jobs. Now women are lining up to hold their empty food bowls out for chicken over rice. Kids are shoving around a massive pot laid out in the dust, scooping the rice directly into their mouths. There's never enough.

When people do not wish to take sides in the Syrian war, they suggest aid. They do not realize aid itself is a weapon. Assad bans aid organizations in opposition areas of the country, viewing it as an attack. The UN has meekly protested, but other Western organizations operate covertly anyway.

The best aid comes from the Muslim and Syrian diaspora communities from around the world. Though they are risking death inside, or the stamp of "terrorist" at home, these NGOs keep trying. I see bros from New Jersey, or nice Midwestern ladies who know one another from mosque, going into the world's most brutal war zone with blankets, formula, or food baskets, and I feel ashamed for every white journalist who made such a big deal that they spent a day inside. Myself included.

A Syrian diaspora organization that does not want to be named has set up two children's tents in Bab al Salam. The tents are cheerful and have murals painted on their inside walls. In one, kids did yoga with a young Syrian guy leading them through crow and lotus poses. Then he had them draw. I drew with them. One boy, 14, and a born performer, did impressions in a high Bugs Bunny voice.

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The tents were the one respite from the dust and sun and shit. If the revolution still exists it is in these young organizers, refugees who have seen the end of their world, working together to rebuild, even in the form of a child's smile.

Outside the camp lies the city of Azaz. ISIS had just been kicked out. The residents painted over their murals in candy colors, writing verses from the Qur'an: "There is no compulsion in religion." Assad's bombs have been more persistent. A missile hit Azaz the day before we visited. We drove out to the bomb site. An entire block was gone, the rubble like crushed Styrofoam, the cars melted. A middle-aged man dug in the dust.

We asked if Patrick could photograph the bomb site, but the man put his hands up in the universal symbol of "Back off." The strike had killed two of his kids. What were we thinking, to come here and make a story off of their blood?

On the way out of Azaz, our car broke down. This is not a city where you want to lose your wheels. Yusuf and Mohammed walked us to Azaz's media office to get what they said were their cameras but were likely their guns. These offices were in a former government building, its grand desk empty (ISIS has kidnapped the media office's commander), with stacks of pamphlets teaching people how to remove someone with a spinal injury from a building that's just been bombed. There are many bombed buildings in Azaz. Walls gone, their rooms gape obscenely. Their floors sag like a ruined cake.

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Somewhere gunshots went off. "A wedding," Yusuf claimed, without much conviction. Banners read "Neither Assad nor ISIS."

In Bab al Salam, as in much of Syria, religious observance has become increasingly rigorous. Too much death does that to people. When we visited, I wore hijab. Men didn't shake my hand. Yet, as Mohammed said to me, "ISIS cares about the stupidest things. Whether you wear jeans. How long your beard is." Theirs is not a logic of piety, but of control. An internet acquaintance living in Raqqa told me ISIS had raided his cousin's café during the World Cup and confiscated his televisions. Football, a Syrian passion, is forbidden. Later, photos surfaced on Twitter of ISIS fighters allegedly enjoying the World Cup on their phones.

Our car broke down again at a checkpoint. We hitched a ride with a hippie-looking fighter in blue camo. He wore a pistol shoved into his belt. The guy who checked us in had a T-shirt reading: "Someone who loves me very much is in Dubai, and all I got was this T-shirt."

Before we left, Yusuf and Mohammed took us up the minaret of Bab al Salam's mosque. I sat sketching those nylon tarps under which 20,000 people took shelter. The tents stretched endlessly on.

The border closed at 5 PM. Before Patrick and I left, Yusuf had us write our names on Post-It notes, which he gave to the Islamic Front's makeshift customs office. This is a real state, was the silent implication. They also stamped a printed slip of paper in lieu of our passports. "Bab al Salam, Free Syria," it read. We walked back across the border.

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Two days before we visited Syria I was in Reyhanli, drawing murals at a refugee school as part of the Zeitouna program, run by the Karam Foundation, another Syrian-American aid initiative. After the school day, we volunteers took a bus to the border.

On the hills of Syria, we could see the Atmeh IDP camp. It was a white smudge containing 25,000 people, run by a tangle of NGOs. Those who live there cannot cross into Turkey.

The antiaircraft guns on the Turkish side of the border reveal why these people came to Atmeh. They hope that if they huddle close enough to a regional power, Assad will not bomb them, for fear of a stray explosion starting a war. He bombs them anyway.

Borders are gouged by war, contorted by diplomacy. But humans live in the borderlands. In those tents so close to Turkey, families suffer the consequences of geopolitics.

The Syrian volunteers took out their cameras for selfies. Smiling, they posed against the country to which they could not return.

Follow Molly Crabapple on Twitter.